0!HE MORNING OKEGONIAN, FMIHY, MAY 23, 190&" Catered at the Fostofflee at Portland, Oregon, as eecond-class matter. REVISED SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By MaU (postage prepaid. In Advance Dally, with Sundav, per month..-.- g Daily, Sunday excepted, per jear J J Dally, with Sunday, per year jj j Sunday, per year ? "jj The Weekly, per year 1 The Weekly, 3 months , w To City Subscribers Daily, per week, delivered, Sundays exceptedV15o Dally, per week, delivered. Sundays included.20o POSTAGE RATES. United States, Canada and Mexico: 10 to 14-page paper ...;............. ..lo 14 to 28-page paper 2c Foreign rates double. News or discussion Intended x or .publication In The Oregonlan should be addressed invaria bly "Editor The Oregonlan," not to the name of any individual. Letters relating to adver tising; subscriptions or to any business matter should be addressed simply 'The Oregonlan." The Oregonlan does not buy poems or stories xrem individuals, and cannot undertake to re turn any manuscripts sent to it without solici tation. 2io stamps should bo Inclosed lor this purpose. Eastern Business Office. 43, 44. 45, 4T, 48. 40 Tribune building. New York City: 510-11-12 Tribune building, Chicago; thS. C. Beckwith Special Agency, Eastern representative. For sale in San Francisco by L. E. Lee, Pal ace Hotel news stand; Goldsmith Bros., 230 Sutter street, F. W. Pitts, 1008 Market street; J. K. Cooper Co , 740 Market street, near the Palace Hotel; Foster jk Orear, Ferry news stand. For sale in Los Angeles by B. T. Gardner, 255 So. Spring street, and Oliver & Haines, 305 Bo Spring street. For sale In Sacramento by Sacramento News Co.. 420 K street, Sacramento, Cal. For sale in Chicago by the P. O. News Co., 217 Dearborn street, and Charles MacDonald, S3 "Washington street. For sale in Omaha by Barkalow Bros., 1012 Farnam street For sale in Salt Lake by the Salt Lake New Co . 77 TV. Second South street. For sale in New Orleans by A. C Phelps, COO Commercial Alley. For tale In Ogden by C H: Myers. On flle at Charleston, S. C, in the Oregon ex hibit at the exposition. For sale In Washington, D. C, by the Ebbett House news stand. For sale in Denver, Colo., by Hamilton & Kendrlck. 000-012 Seventeenth street; Louthan & Jackson Book & Stationery Co., 15th and Lawrence streets; A. Series, 1G53 Champa street. i TODAY'S WEATHER-Partly cloudy, with occasional showers; southwesterly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 53; minimum temperature, 40; pre cipitation, 0 00. PORTLAND, FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1002. OUR IMPEXDIKG CALAMITY. It seems strange that no one has sug gested arbitration for the great strike that hangs like a pall over the business and comfort of Portland; and yet again It is not strange; for all the conditions under which arbitration. Is proposed and made effective are absent from the sit uation. Questions of schedules can be submitted to a board of arbitration, if that hoard is empowered or assisted by the contending parties to get at the facts as to the ability of the employers to meet the demands of the men, and as to the need of the men for the con cessions asked. It is perfectly plain that no such situation exists in this Portland strike. The issue is nominally one of hours, but at bottom it is in real ity one of unionism The employers are determined to check the union aa an ef fective agency of combined demands of the men, and the men are equally aa de termined to maintain the union in. that capacity. Few of. the employers, doubtless, would say they are opposed to the union. They don't object to organiza tion, they will say, Taut they do think a man has the right to run his own busi ness to suit himself. The men can liave all the unions they want, so long as they use them solely for purposes of mental, moral and social improvement, "but the moment they attempt to use them as a means of enforcing demands for the betterment of their financial con dition, in other words, for Increase of pay or the amelioration of conditions under which labor is performed, then the'millmen will resist to the death. If they can't run their own business to suit themselves, they won't run it at alL If they must be dictated to by a lot of union officials who have no con nection with the mills; if they must run certain hours, and sell only to such and euch people and treat as equals a set of agitators whom they despise why, then they will endure and even rejoice at the spectacle of cold furnaces and silent wheels- As one of them said "Wednesday: "We will stay until our men are ready to take off their hats, how their heads and march back to the sound of muffled drums." Now this is a very natural and even justifiable position for the mlllmen to take. Logically, there Is no escape from the simple proposition that a man is entitled to run his business in his own way. Logically, it is preposterous, of course, as Sir. Connell says, that a plan ing mill man should be asked to make terms about wages and hours In his mill with, . committee consisting of a bnckmaker, a clgarmaker and a laundry-worker. Yet this may all be true, as it undoubtedly is. and yet it may also be true that the natural, logical and even justifiable position for an em ployer to take is nevertheless a position which he cannot successfully maintain, and which actually does himself more harm than good. We have to take the world as we trad it, human nature as we find it, and organized labor as we find it. What seems to us right and just to us may not, and in fact seldom does, seem to the man at the other end of the bargain to be what is" right and just to him. Our determination to run our own business in our own way may come into violent opposition with our employe's determination to work for us in his own way. It will suit us for him to bow his head and march in humbly; but it may not suit him; and stubborn ness and arrogance, however admirable in esthetics or agreeable to self-love, do not always win. When Mr. W. P. Hearst sends out to the Chicago American the mold or matrix of a page of type that has been already cast for the New York Journal, the page is subjected to the jurisdiction of the printers' union, whose concern it most certainly is not The union de cides, and Mr. Hearst acquiesces, that "before this stereotyped page can be run In the American, the type must be set up in the Chicago office, proof read on It. corrections made, and the whole put In readiness for publication. All this I 'miOM'WILL YOU PLEASE I TVTIAT RESULT JJO YOU WANT r . WHERE WOULD YOU RATHER SEE OREGO STAXDf Men of Oregon, whose eyes shall greet this page this morning, in your hands Is the result of Oregon's election a week from Mon day. Yours are the power and the responsibility, yours will be the, penalty or the reward. A Democratic victory will please certain ones, a Republican victory will please certain others. "Which will you reward the friends of your prosperity or its enemies? Choose be- tween the columns. Republican Success Will Please The Republican North. Our Soldiers in the Philippines Friends of the Canal. President Roosevelt A Manufacturera Honest-Money Men. Mitchell, Tongue and Moody. It Is known that President Roosevelt Is looking toward Oregon, for approval of his stand Against the trusts and of the general poli cies of his own and the McKinley administrations. Sound money and expansion, strict coatrol of trusts, fairness to organized labor, in dependence of Wall street, enforcement of the National authority In the Philippines the same as In Porto Rico all the5e things are up for the decision of the people. The verdict of a week from Monday will be accepted by the country at that valuation. Chamberlain's good-fellowship or Simon's vengeance will have no part In that Inter pretation. The issue is fair and square between trie two choices. "Which will you promote? Republican Success " Will Promote Confidence. Belief in Fair-TradS. Expansion. , Honest Money Patriotism. Good Times. Do you want to be the men to start another period of Democratic menace to all business and industry? Do you want to reward Tillman, Carmack, Patterson, Rawlins and others who are maligning our soldiers In the Philippines and seeking to degrade the American name? Do you want Oregon to stand in the Democratic column along with the Southern States, or In the Republican column along with New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Indiana, the old doubtful states, and all the great and growing states of the great Middle Northwest? " - Do you want to start a movement to abandon the Philippine islands and relinquish the foothold gained there for Asiatic markets? Do you want to go before a Republican Congress, asking for money for an expansion Centennial, after having elected a Democratic Governor on an anti-expansion platform? DO YOU THINK MORE OP GEORGE CIIAMBERLAIX AND JOE SIMOX THAN YOU DO OP YOUR OWX WELFARE f work must be paid for; and then Mr. Hearst is free to run the stereotype or his freshly-set page as he chooses. Here is a proceeding both unwarranted and impertinent; and Mr. Hearst would be justified, If he were so inclined, to tell his printers he would see them else where before he would pay them a cent for setting up a page of matter he can send stereotyped from his own office In New York. But he doesn't He reasons In a broad .way that It is better in the long run to put up with occasional In justice and Inconvenience (and no uni form rule, however equitable en general principles, can escape causing occa sional injustice and inconvenience), for the sake of the general good results he gets with a contented and cheerful and willing and loyal body of workmen. The Oregonlan has learned a great deal in fifty years of study and experi ence with trades-unions; and its de liberate advice, which It hopes will be candidly received as offered, and which it hopes may exert some beneficial In fluence at thi3 critical hour Its advice to both sides of the present controversy, is that nothing is to be gained by a spirit of unreasoning defiance and a de sire to win simply for the purpose of proving oneself right and one's antago nist in the wrong. The members of our trades-unions, especially when as in Portland they are In great part fairly educated and enlightened Americans, are not bad men. They are the sup porters, not the enemies, of law, justice and order, They pay their taxes with out lawsuits, their children are in our schools and clad as well as parental love and foresight can clothe them. They are not unreasonable men. If they are approached in a spirit of reason ableness and kindness, though there Is enough of human nature In them to show resentment at slight or scorn. There are hotheaded and dangerous fellows among the strikers, just as there are men in the employers' ranks with out a drop of human kindness in their selfish breasts. But these hotheaded and dangerous fellows are the objects of fear and distrust from their fellows, rather than, of approval. Therefore let us urge upon, masters and men alike a spirit of conciliation and concession, above all an absence of anger and in vidious disparagement It is oot an auspicious move toward settlement to say there is nothing to arbitrate. The main point In this momentous crisis Is not to punish anybody on either side. The main point is to bring about the resumption of business at the earliest possible hour. A struggle to the death is just what the public welfare doesn't want; because the casualties will bo heaviest among the Innocent non-combatants whose livelihood must be imper iled while the embattled men and mas ters devastate the field of industry and trade. If the unions offer to discuss the issues with the employers, or if the employers offer to discuss the Issues with the unions, the responsibility and the odium will rest upon those who de cline. The coal strikes, where one Mitchell, a preacher and now an agi tator, is recognized both by the mine owners and the Civic Federation alike as representative of the miners, has set at naught the old contention that unions cannot be recognized by employ ers without loss of their self-respect It was recently announced, as a re sult of Investigations and experiments that lasted many months, that the War Department is now in possession of a secret method of firing big guns that does away with the little cloud of white smoke which has heretofore betrayed the firing of the pieces, even when charged with smokeless powder. This discovery will, it Is asserted, completely mask a battery, since it will be impos sible to tell that a shell has been fired until it drops or shrieks over the lines or encampment The value of this dis covery is minimized somewhat, how ever, by the experience of soldiers in Rnuth Afrlrn tfhn av -tv n.v it... can see iha jeuns at all they can always It, S Democratic Success "Will Plcaso The Solid South. Copperheads in the Senate. The Railroad Lobbies. The Trusts " Free Traders. Bryan and Tillman. Joseph Simon. Democratic Success WiU Promote Apprehension. Fears of Free Trade. Scuttle. Financial Heresy. Copperheadism. Doubt and Retrenchment tell when the discharge Is about to take place, as the gunners jump away from the gun when the loading Is completed. From this movement It Is known that the shell is to-be expected the next mo ment Thus the Instinct of self-preservation, alert In its own cause, Is able to defeat human Ingenuity, plotting the destruction of human life. AJf INDEPENDENT JOURNALIST. With the possible exception of Thomas Addis Emmet, the late Lawrence God kln Is the ablest Irishman who made this his adopted country after he had reached full manhood and had been thoroughly educated In the land of his birth For the very great service that Mr. Godkln wrought the cause of inde pendent, high-mindea and Intelligent journalism In America, It was perhaps fortunate that he was not born and bred an American, and that he came to this country a thoroughly educated Irishman of 25. Had he been born and bred In America, he would prbbably have been drawn early into politics, and, had he sought the .field of journal Ism, would doubtless have made an upright but probably a bitter partisan Journalist, with the virtues and infirm ities of Greeley, or. an able, intellectual opportunist in journalism, like Ray mond. Mr. Godkln, coming to this country at maturity, equipped with ex cellent scholarship and Old World ex perience; escaped the disease of pas--slonate, brutal partisanship in journal Ism, and by natural gravity of mind escaped the contagion of easy, good natured lndifferentism. He saw that there was room for a higher type of Independent journalism than America possessed In 1S65, and In the Nation he was the thlck-and-thln supporter "of no party. He has been accurately de scribed as "the sfdvocate of public or der, of political and social morality and Individual self-restraint" He was hos tile to Incompetency, fanaticism and sentimentality In both of the great par ties. He welcomed honest, able, patri otic purpose and service wherever he found it In the first fifteen years following the Civil War the country greatly needed able, independent Journalism like that of Mr. Godkln, for the burning issues that were consequent upon 'that conflict disturbed the just balance of the most Intelligent and conservative minds in both the great parties. Mr. Godkln was an Intelligent critic, for he had lived nearly tea years In the United States, and he was a dispassionate critic, be cause he did not come to this country until he was 5 and hlseducatlon was complete. He brought dignity, scholar ship, Intelligence and Incisive intellect ual force to the discussion of current political and social issues. The Nation soon commanded a hearing from earn est, thoughtful menin both parties. After he had given 15 years of service to the Nation, it became merged In the New York Evening Post As editor of the Post Mr. Godkln was of splendid service to the cause of good govern ment through his unquaillng, ceaseless hostility to Tammany Hall at a time when some of the leading journals of New York City either auletlv nlaved into the hands of Tammany or were ln- different to its misdeeds and malign life to its natural termination, miser influence. The onlv man n fhnf ma. ki.. 5 , A x - . ,. infiuence who was the peer of Mr. Godkln In In j - - - "- nonr nt Xfi CnArt I l tellect versatile 'scholarship and capa city as an editorial writer was Charles A. Dana, of the Sun. Indeed, Mr. Dana was more than f the peer of Mr. Godkln In the versatility of his gifts. His so cial personality was at once impressive and charming through his abundant wit and abounding good humor, while Mr. Godkln was a man of nervous Irrita bility of temper aggravated by over work. Sometimes Mr. Dana frater nized with Tammany and sometimes he vigorously warred upon Tammany, but whether he was for Tammany or against it, ' the Sun under Mr. Dana never had anything but jeers and sneers for "Larry" Godkln. This was the flaw in Mr. Dana's dia mond. He stood easily at the head of the American press in ability, scholar- ship and Influence; he was personally a man pf high character and had ren-; dered his country great service during the Civil "War; but when Mr. Godkln was doing able and efficient service against Tammany Hall he was always sure to obtain ridicule at the hands of the Sun. If it was due to dislike for Mr. Godkln's personal infirmities of temper, it was not worthy of so influ- due to a disposition to help Tammany wnen helping Tammany was good busi ness, It certainly was not to its credit. At all events, the only able enemy that the civic despotism and corruption of Tammany Hall had without break In the New York Dress was the New York ) Evening Pest under Godkln. He fought it early and late, without fear or favor, with all the effective weapons of a press writer, except humor; he had wit and satire at his command, but the de lightful mocking humor which Dana possessed was not one of the gifts of Mr. Godkln. Mr. Godkin tested the substance of all public questions always fearlessly and generally fairly. No good cause had any need to fear him, for his very op position was enlightenment He taught his foe how to parry by showing him1 where nakedness invitedjittack. Wltb out gush, without a taint of sensation alism in his composition, with a cold, clear head, writing a pithy, forcible style, he used his pen with the pug nacity of a warrior. He instinctively hated scoundrels and hypocrites. His mere political judgments were some times erroneous, but his permanent moral and -intellectual force in politics was very great He was an educator of intelligent, growing minds. His Eng lish was admirable In Its vigor, purity and freshness. He was sometimes un fair, but the spirit of moral and Intel lectual Integrity was the pervasive pas sion of the man. His scolding was an education to his adopted country, since he scolded so effectually that he left his great profession a nobler power than he found It; left thoughtful, generous-minded men In all parties glad that he became an adopted citizen of this country, for whose enlightenment and elevation of soul Jie devoted the best powers of riis mind and hart with sig nal ability for more than thirty years. RECOGXITION OP ROCHAMBEAU. Tomorrow, In the presence of a dis tinguished company, the statue of Gen eral Rochambeau. who commanded the French troops In tjhe victorious cam paign of Yorktown, will be unveiled. Our Minister to France, General Horace Porter, will make an address on this occasion. Among the notable French men who will b,e present will be Gen eral Brugere, of the French Army; Count de Rochambeau, who Is a de scendant of a brother of the Revolu tionary General; Vlscomte de Cham brun, the great grandson of La Fay ette; Ferdinand Hamar, the sculptor of the Rochambeau statue; Admiral For nlere, of the French Navy, and Ambas sador Cambon. The services performed by General Rochambeau with his 6000 French troops' were of Inestimable value to our Infant Nation. Without this French contin gent and the fleet of Admiral De Grasse the success of the Yorktown campaign would have been impossible of attain ment. Had The English fleet been able to beat De Grasse, Cornwallis could not. have been successfully blockaded at Yorktown, and without the reinforce ment J of the 6000 French regulars brought by Rochambeau to the assist ance of Washington and the -3000 French troops with which De Grasse.relnforced La Fayette before the arrival of Wash ington and Rochambeau, Cornwallis would have been able to- escape from, the tolls by which he was surrounded. Washington's plan was excellent, and Its execution wag most energetic; but without the knowledge that he could count on the 6000 French veterans of Roohambeau and the fleet and marines of De Grasse. "Washington could not have hoped for success in forcing Corn wallis to surrender. But for the French soldiers and fleet, Sir Henry Clinton would have been able to rescue Corn wallis from his critical situation. Noth ing Is more historically certain than that the American Revolution was xn its last legs when Its success was as sured by the arrival of Rochambeau and De Grasse. At this critical moment France brought us 6000 disciplined sol diers, a strong fleet, with 3000 marines and money. While it Is true that General Rocham beau did his work with military skill, the French troops storming one of the redoubts at Yorktown and the Ameri cans the other, nevertheless he has never held any place In the American' neart like that obtained by La Fayette, for Rochambeau was a professional sol dier obeying the official orders of his government La Fayette was a volun teer, who, In disobedience of the orders of his government, came to America at his own expense, spent his wealth like water In our cause before the French Government had become persuaded thrpugh the surrender of Burgoyne to come to our aid against Great Britain. La Fayette offered us his sword, his llfe,i his property, when we had but a most desperate chance of success, while France turned a deaf ear to our appeal until after the surrender of Burgoyne. La. Fayette fought for the cause of American liberty, while France helped America only to help herself. The discovery of the body of Mrs. Gei ger, the young woman who disappeared so mysteriously In this city some three weeks ago, in the Willamette River, solves the mystery of her fate, but throws no light whatever upon the deeper mystery which precipitated her death. The only explanation possible is that she was one of a multitude of hu man beings who cannot withstand the ordinary vicissitudes of life, and who at a certain point deliberately refuse to accept them. Another detachment of V. n-k. . !-,, ,. a. i oui uuuuuiuuii ui every alter) oi me ian- .... .... ure mat is witnm tnemseives, yet ut terly lacking strength of purpose neces sary to turn It into success. Perhaps the latter division of the great army of lncapables. are more to be pitied than the f former, but both challenge and should receive the sympathy of persons whom nature has cast In a stronger mold. Longfellow's Immortal exhorta tion In the world's broad field of battle In the blr&uac of life. Be not like dumb, driven cattle, Be a hero In the strife. Has fallen as an Inspiration upon thou sands of lives. That it has heen mean ingless to other thousands may be held to indicate the cause of the failure of one man and' the success of another whose opportunities in life, to the out ward seeming, were equal. It becomes humanity to be humble In the presence of these facts so painfully Illustrated by the object-lessons of every day, and ask reverently "Who made these men to differ?" "Whatever the answer may be, or whether any one is bold enough to essay an answer, the fact that hu man beings do differ should soften many of the asperities of life and sl- 17 sharp voice of criticism In connection Mt with what Is termed individual success and failure in life. Mr. Baker's success In his theatrical venture, resulting In a long lease of the theater that Is known by his name. Is gratifying In every way. Portland will pay for good attractions at fair prices and Is a "bad show town" chiefly to the undeserving. It is fortunate for the city tnat Its dramatic affairs are In sucn Worthy and progressive hands as those of Mr. Hellig, Mr. Cordray and Mr. Baker. Their public spirit, moreover, was attested by the prompt and hearty response they jointly made to the ap peal for subscriptions in aid of the Lewis and Clark Centennial. One of the secrets of Mr. Baker's success Is the liberal use of printer's Ink. The people of Martinique are, It Is said, anxious to abandon the island. In this it would be well to encourage and If necessary to assist them. Economics, Whether applied to human life or to finance, dlscouraire homebuildine: and business undertakings under the shadow or a belching volcano, the pitiless power of which has been so severely tested as has that of Mount Pelee. An escape valve for Internal furies, it is impossi ble to tell when It will be opened to the forces of destruction or to what extent their ruthless energies will be employed for death and devastation. At last a woman's head Is to adorn a United States postage stamD. Very properly this will be the head of Mar tha WashlngtPn, the first mistress of the "Republican court"" Upon the new 8-cent stamp soon to be issued will ap pear In profile the benign features of this grand colonial dame the wife of Washington. Oregon lias received everything It de sired at the hands of a Republican Con gress. Nothing which it earnestly de sired has been refused. Its decent re turn will be a decisive Republican ma jority in June. The Four Per Cent Provision. San Francisco Bulletin. The United States owes the Oregon to the 4 per cent provision in the naval ap propriation bill of the year the contract with the Union Iron Works Was signed. The provision was simply a recognition of the well-known fact that materials and labor are higher on the Pacific Coast than in other cities in the United States. If the Union Iron Works Company had put in a bid low enough to secure the contract without the 4 per cent provision, It could not have built the battle-ship that steamed round Cape Horn and reported Itself at Key West "fit for duty." But this Is only a part of the record of the Oregon. An other part will be found In Admiral Schley's testimony about the early events of the memorable 3d of July. There were moments on that day when the Issue "was In doubt In one of these dark moments Admiral Schley saw the white prow of a battle-ship breaking through the cloud of smoke in which the squadron was en veloped. His quick eye took in two things first, that the white prow was that of the Oregon, and, second, that her speed was equal to that of the cruiser upon which he was standing. From that mo ment the issue was no longer in doubt. The Oregon Was more heavily armored than the Brooklyn, and its speed was equal. The two steamed after the flying Spanish -vessels with a speed and a pre cision of fire that drove the enemy- ashore. Of the battle-ships, the Oregon was the only one that could keep close to the Brooklyn. Four per cent of JS.OOO.OQO is $200,000. That Is what the Oregon cost the Government in excess of what an average battle-ship would have coat. Two hundred thousand dollars! What American would take 100 times that sum of money for the record of that day's work, a record that would have been Incomplete had the Ore gon been Just an average battle-ship! Still the naval committee proposes to econo mizeto strike out of the appropriation bill the 4 per cent provision which placed Pacific Coast shipyards on an equality, so far as the cost of construction goes, with Atlantic Coast shipyards. The Fate of Treacherous Guides. General Order 100, of 1S63, which General Jacob H. Smith pleaded as his authority for Issuing circulars to his officers to use retaliatory measures against insur gents in Samar, Is fully indorsed by Secretary Root and the President Re taliation was not resorted to In Samar until after Balangiga massacre, where insurgenGs fully demonstrated that at Samar insurgents violated all rules of war In their wanton murder of the sol diers at Balangiga, and this alone is con strued by Army officers to Justify General Smith In retaliating "as a means of protective retiibutlon," to quote the words of the order. In the order the principle Is laid down that "all troops of the enemy, known or discovered to give no quarter in general or to any portion of the Army, receive none." it is pomtea out ty rnenas of Major Waller that It was well known that the Insurgents at Balan giga gave no quarter, and that un der this section General Smith was warranted in directing that no quar ter be given the enemy. That punishment by death in retaliation is authorized by the order for offenses less than mur der Is shown In section 5S, uhlch pro vides that "if an enemy of the United States should enslave and sell any cap tured persons of their army It would be a case for the severest retaliation," and that as "the United States cannot retal iate by enslavement, therefore death must be the retallatibn for this crime," Under this order the shooting of treacher ous guides is fully authorized an act of Major Waller that has been ignorantly Impeached by the critics of our military authorities. The Wold's Peace. Japan Osaka Mainlchl. While the contracting powers In the new alliance are Great Britain and Japan on paper, there is also the unofficial American support of the alliance. It 13 an alliance of the three powers which hold the balance ot power in the fir East, in commerce, In navigation and In naval and military strength. These three powers can defy the world, and we dq not hesitate to assert that their alliance is sufficient to guarantee the peace of the world. The mist of uncertainty which has hung over the far East since the China-Japan war has been dispersed. t The House Beautiful. Ladles' Field. One of the things which partlcuuarly strike one in the last 23 years Is the enor mous stride which has been made' Iri the beautifying ot the Interior of houses Nowadays taste has so much Improved that an ugly house Is the exception, not the rule; although I remember having seen quite recently Japanese fans and aspin alled milking stools In a noble old oak paneled picture gallery, where they looked as Incongruous as a few yards of pink tulle would, appear 1 used as a drapery In Westminster Abbey. "Where M.,P.'b Are Plentiful. Australian Review of Reviews. . Australia has more members of Parlia ment per head of population than any other civilized community on earth. The mere statement that, excluding New Zeal and, Australia posscses no fewer than 14 Hou3Cs of Parliament counting 751 mem bers, for a population of less than 4,000, 000. Is a bit of arithmetic calculate tn make all sober Australians sigh, and the rest of the outside world grin THE WORST BRUTALITY OF ALL.. Denver Republican. The most brutal thing In connection with the war in the Philippines and the sub jection of those Islands to the authority of the United States is the attack made by a lot of contemptible Democratic Senators and yellow Journalists upon the honor of American soldiers who are fighting for the flag in those far-away Islands. These soldiers are the pick of the strong, vigorous young men of the country. In response to the call for troops they volun tarily enlisted, to risk their health and their lives for the establishment of Ameri can authority and the defense ot Ameri can fl;ig in a remote and tropical region, not only exposed to the diseases common to that climate and to the bullets ot the enemy, but subjected also to the danger of being tortured to death by a cruel and vindictive foe! They went out to the Phil ippines at the command of the Govern ment, and behind the Government in this matter stood the American people. They are in the Philippines battling for a cause which the American people In dorse, and which has been advocated most vehemently and eloquently by Senator Patterson himself, and which Is an out growth of the treaty with Spain, the rati fication of which was due in a largemeas ure to the influence of William J. Bryan. It is worse than ingratitude to refuse to extend to these brave fighting men the sympathy they deserve. It Is brutal be yond anything ever charged against them to open fire in their rear and while they are far away to bring false and malicious charges against them of cruelty to the Inhabitants of the Philippines. The Democratic Senators who have thus tried to blacken the fair name not only ot American soldiers, but also of the American Nntlon, have done so In the ma lignity of their hearts, reckless of the consequence fi, provided only that they may make some little political capital for themselves or seem to gain some petty advantage for the party they disgrace and the political associates whom they dis honor. They care nothing for the fact that the soldiers whom they thus vilify and traduce are obeying the orders of the American people, and should be encour aged and sustained through all the trials and sufferings to which they are sub jected. They care nothing for the fact that by these false and malicious accusa tions they would bring the Government of this country Into disgrace and dishonor were It not that their testimony -will not be accepted before the tribunal of public opinion in any part" of the world. These slanderers and mallgners, who are a reproach to the states that sent them to the Senate, are of the same kind with the Tories of the Revolutionary War and the Copperheada of the War of the Rebellion. Vipers of this same species obstructed the efforts of Mr. Lincoln and all the other patriotic people of the North to save the Union from destruction; and now we see them showing their heads again to hiss at the men who are risking their lives for their country and making sacrifices which these backbiters would not so much as dream of making for any cause under the sun unless it promoted their own selfish and ignoble ambitions. Popular Election of Senators. Chicago Tribune. Senator Frye says he is "decidedly against the election of United States Sen ators oy popular vote." He Is unable, he says, to see any good reason for a change in the method of electing them, or any benefits to be derived by any deDarture from the present methods. Personal con siderations do not Influence Senator Frye's Judgment Whatever may be the method of election, he will continue to represent nis state, let he Is aware that there is a popular sentiment In favor of a change and that the sentiment la not an evan escent one. It is gaining In strength con tinually. Men who are as sober-minded and as conservative as Senator Frye are becoming converted to the belief that the election of Senators by the people will do away with a harmful anomaly In our po litical system. The House of Representa tives has voted unanimously for the sub mission to the states of an amendment for the popular election of Senator. This ac tion is significant The House Is not made up of rash, thoughtless men, eager for change for the sake of change. There are In It men who are as 'well acquainted with the strong and weak points ot our political institutions as Senator Frye Is. Under the circumstances the Senator should be willing to give the people an opportunity to decide whether they favor a change in the method of electing Sen ators. There can be no change without the concurrence of three-fourths of the states. The people are so conservative where the National Constitution Is con cerned that any amendment to it which receives the votes of 34 State Legislature! will represent the deliberate, well-reasoned views of the people. If an amendment providing for the eelction of Senators by the people does not strongly commend It self to Americans it will not be ratified. In that event Senator Frye can safely vote for the submission of the amendment. If three-fourths of the states are pre pared to ratify It no Senator has a right to1 balk the wishes of the people. Ostentation in Hospitality. London Tattler. People seem to have lost the power of living quietly and happily In their coun try homes. The country is only made en durable to them by sport and gambling and boisterous house parties; and when from ono cause or another these resources fall they are frankly bored and long for London. They are no longer content, as our faJJiers were, to entertain their friends with hospitable simplicity. So pro foundly have all society been vulgarized by the worship of the golden calf that un less people can vie with alien millonaires in the sumptuousness with which they "do you" delightful phrase they prefer not to entertain at all. An emulous os tentation has killed hospitality. Sham Champagne, London Family Doctor. American apples are cored, sliced and dried, sent to France, and there con verted Into cider. With the addition of carbonic acid gas and yeast and a little flavoring powder, the cider becomes champagne, and much of it comes to England and Is drunk under the delusion that it Is of the best brand. Emigration. Tho following appears in a Philadelphia pa per of the year 183S, under the head. "Grand Scheme ot Emigration." It Is a curious per formance throughout, and the concluding lines have a very characteristic drollery: The Brewers should to Malt-a go. The loggerheads to Scilly; The Quakers to the Frlend-ly Isles. The fur-riers to Chile. The little, bawling, squalling babes. That break our nightly rest. Should be packed ofC to Baby-Ion, To Lap-land, or to Brest. From Splthead. cooks go o'er to Greece; And while the miser watts His passage to the Guinea Coast, Spendthrifts are In the Straits. Spinsters should to the Needles go, WIne-blbben to Burgundy, Gourmands should lunch at Sandwich Isles, Wags at the Bay of Fun-dy. Musicians hasten to the Sound. The surpllced priests to Rome (roam). While still the race of hypocrites At Cant-on are at home. Lovers should hasten to Good Hope, To some Cape Horn Is pain;. Debtors should go to Qh-l-o, " And. sailors to the Maine. Hie bachelors to the United States, Maids to the Isle of ,Man; Let gardeners all to Botany go, And shoeblacks to Japan. Thus emigrate, and misplaced men Will than no longer vex us; And all that ain't provided for BfiI better so to Texas, NOTE AND COMMENT. Hurrah for the Fourth of July! We ara Americans, after all. Judge Williams has a record, and he can look at It without blushing. The cats around the palace will not re quire Invitations to the coronation. The Martinique Immigration Bureau has undoubtedly gone out of business. The Nebraska volcano can scarcely hope to compete Vilih the editor pf the Com moner. Modjeska sajis that stage fame Is like Dead Soa apples. It certainly becomes seedy, in some cases. But let us hope on. After a while Mor gan will bo making so much money that he won't be able to keep it all. Martinelll says he will consider Amer ica his second country. Where does the Reverend Cardinal place Heaven? The North "Western Railroad has abol isher smoking on Its line and employes are Included as Well as locomotives. The peace-at-any-moment correspond ents in South Africa are as numerous as the peace-at-any-prlce men at home. Tammany is having more trouble. The people of New York, however, will soon become sorry for It and help it back Into power. Baron Munchausen ha3 been breaking athletic records. Perhaps his distin guished relative left him his ability as a press agent When Miss Stone's story is on sale for 10 cents, with other things thrown in, why should people pay half a dollar to hear her tell it , Clyde Fitch Is recuperating In Italy from the strain of hard work. This bus iness of writing three plays a day is wearing on a man. Uncle Sam had better got a fire depart ment ready for service in the Danish West Indies. There is no telling what may happen down there. Pension Commissioner "Ware has got out a new' edition of his poems. His appointment was certainly a top-column-next-to-readlng-matter advertisement The Ohio Legislature was so drunk the last night of tho session that the Speaker had to cut short the proceedings on his own responsibility. There followed what the reporters call a Bacchanalian revel through the streets of Columbus. Wllhelm Busch, the German humorist and comic artist received the following message from the Kaiser the other day: "To the poet and artist whose splendid creations, full of genuine humor, will Ilyo Imperishable among the German people, I express my sincere congratulations on the occasion of his 70th birthday. May a beautiful evening be vouchsafed to his life. In gratitude for the many merry hours which you give him. William I. R." Rev. James Polet, Baptist minister, is in Sangamon County Jail, ab Springfield, III., on a charge of having killed his young friend, Charles Isaksson. He is a cultured man, whose home Is In Graf ton, and who has been well known as a missionary worker. He was latejy en gaged In his gospel labors at Granite City, wher6 he first met Isaksson. Rev. Mr. Polet says he knows nothing of the death of Ws friend, whose body was found In North Springfield soon after his having been seen with the clergyman. Sarah Bernhardt Is the silent partner of her niece and another young French woman In a projected millinery shop for London. The famous actress lent these two young women a good many thousand francs a couple of years since, when they opened a shop In Paris, where they re cently became bankrupt. She did not scold them, however, for their bad luck, but, with a tender smile, exclaimed: "You are both pretty and winning little Paris ians, and you have become bankrupt in the land of millions. Bravo, my dears, I am sure I could never have dona that. Now, shall we try our luck In London?" And she threw a bundle of bank notes into her niece's lap. Few people know that these horses learn dancing Just as men and women do. They actually go to a "school of danc ing for horses," and there is a big school of this kind In New York, where there are many bright pupils on the hoof. In the school competent instructors drill them in the several feats they are to perform, and accustom them to music, teach them to run up Inclined planes, and to obey the slightest word of command. After being thoroughly drilled the horse3 are given several dress rehearsals on the stage until pronounced ready for their debut At the school there are always several veteran actor horses waiting for an engagement There are also under studies ready for work at an Instant's notice. t PLEASANTRIES OF PARAGRAPHERS Tit for Tat. He Many a girl wears a sailor hat who can't row a boat. She Yes; and many a man wears a silk hat who can't set up a sto etflpe. Chicago Dally News. A Cruel AStab. Miss Fortysummers I had a proposal last night and refused It. Miss Crush erYou are alwajs thinning of the welfare of others, aren't you, dear? Ohio State Journal. Looking Blue for Milkman. "I mora than suspect our milkman." "Of what do you sus pect hlmr "Of trying to work the Filipino water cure 6n us. Look at the color of that milk!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Cleansing Process. "How clean and fresh the landscape looks today." said Mrs Hiland to her husband. "I read something In the paper about detectives scouring the country," ex plained Mr. Hiland. Pittsburg Chronicle. Sweet Innocence! "Did you ever see the like?" exclaimed the Blllvllle matron. "Why, what's the matter?" "Ef thar ain't Innocence J!nkiri3 klllln' ratlesnakes without a sign of a sunbonnet on her head !" Atlanta Constitution. In Doubt 'Does jour husband like your cooking?" "Well, I'm not Just sure. He says he does, but I notice he. Is usually detained at the offlce so late that he has to get dinner up town whenever wo are without a girl." Chicago Post. Farmer (la cart) Hi. stop! Stop. you. fool! Don't you see my horse Is running away? Driver of motor-car (hired by the hour) Yefc, It's all very well for you to say "stfep," but I've forgotten bow the blooming thing works 1 Punch. The Slick Ruralltei Cyrus These here auto mobiles are great hay-savers, gllas So they be! When yeou are car tin liay to market and an automobile catches up behind, yeou can blockade the road without fear ot half your load beln' eaten up." Harlem Life. Extensive Conflagration. "Yes," said the conductor. "I remember It very well. That was In 1S07, the year of the big Are." "What big Are?" asked the other man. "Don't you recollect? Twenty-nlno fellows on our Una wero bounced for knocking down." Chicago Tribune. Not Completely Filled. "Isn't this awful? asked the common-looking man on the crowd ed street-car. "Isn't this awful? Why, there are already IGo people on this car " "It Is aw ful." agreed the person addressed, who was a street-railway magnate. "It Is awful. There ought to be at least 20 more In here. Til taka that conductor's number, and have him. on I the carpet tcmorrcw." Baltimore Ataericaa.